Background
Lawson was born in Finchley, Middlesex, England son of Scottish parents who had lived at Kirkpatrick.
Lawson was born in Finchley, Middlesex, England son of Scottish parents who had lived at Kirkpatrick.
He was later a land owner, grazier, and elected official He trained as a surveyor in London but later bought a commission in the New South Wales Corps and migrated to Sydney, arriving in November 1800. Shortly after his arrival he was posted to work at the military station at Norfolk Island.
By 1813, when Lawson received the invitation of Gregory Blaxland to cross the Blue Mountains, he had become an established colonial officer and pastoralist in New South Wales with lands in Concord and Prospect.
Lawson commenced his exploration of the Blue Mountains alongside Blaxland and William Charles Wentworth on 11 May 1813. He kept a journal of the expedition titled, "West Lawsons Narrative.
Across Blue Mountains ". In his first entry he writes: Mr.
Blaxland Wentworth and myself with four men and four HorsesLaden with Provisions etctook our Departure on Tuesday the 11th May 1813.
Crossed the Nepean River at Mr. Chapman"s Farm Emma Island at four oclock and proceeded Southwest. Two miles. Encamped at 5 oclock at the foot of the first of Hills-.
On 31 May 1813, the party reached the most westerly point of their expedition, now known as Mount Blaxland.
On this day, Lawson writes: After the crossing, Lawson like Blaxland and Wentworth, was rewarded with a grant of 1,000 acres (4 km²) of land by Governor Macquarie. He selected this land to be along the Campbells River, part of the Bathurst settlement for which he was appointed Commandant until his retirement in 1824.
Whilst Commandant he continued to make expeditions, and in 1821 with Constable Blackman discovered the Cudgegong River and further explored Mudgee and its outlying regions. He died at his estate Veteran Hall in Prospect on 16 June 1850.
The town of Lawson in the Blue Mountains is named for him.
Following Lawson"s death Veteran Hall was eventually acquired by the Metropolitan Water Board and most of the granted property is now submerged by the waters of Prospect reservoir. The house was demolished in 1926. In 1963 Lawson was honoured, together with Blaxland and Wentworth, on a postage stamp issued by Australia Post depicting the Blue Mountains crossing.
Additional resources listed by the Australian Dictionary of H. C. H. East. C. West.
this Country will I have no doubt be a great acquisition to this Colony and no difficulty in making a good Road to it, and take it in a Political point of View if in case of our Invasion it will be a safe Retreat for the Inhabitance with their Familys and that for this part of the Country is so formed by Nature that a few men would be able to defend the passes against a large body.
Once Lawson had retired from the army he entered politics and became a member of the New South Wales Legislative Council for County of Cumberland from 1843 to 1848.